Sustainable Reaction and Separation Systems

With increasing environmental awareness and natural resource limitations, researchers must begin to incorporate sustainability into their process and product designs. One target for green engineering is in reaction and separation design. This is typically done in a wasteful and often toxic manner...

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Main Author: Newton, Elizabeth Lynn
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2006
Subjects:
BSG
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/7463
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spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-74632013-01-07T20:12:24ZSustainable Reaction and Separation SystemsNewton, Elizabeth LynnTetrabutylammonium tetrafluoroborateTetrahexylammonium bromideLysozymeBovine serum albuminIndeneBSGFerulic acid4-VGIndinavirChemical processesSeparation (Technology)MixturesLiquidsChemical engineeringWith increasing environmental awareness and natural resource limitations, researchers must begin to incorporate sustainability into their process and product designs. One target for green engineering is in reaction and separation design. This is typically done in a wasteful and often toxic manner with organic solvents and lack of recycle. The following thesis discusses alternatives to these costly separations by means of ionic liquids, benign extraction, separation with carbon dioxide, and near critical water. Ionic liquids are combined with carbon dioxide to induce melting point depressions of up to 124 degrees Celsius. Using this system as a reaction medium will offer control over the reaction phases while utilizing green solvents. Benign extractions are performed on both ferulic acid and on proteins from biomass by replacing alkaline solvents and costly protein separation techniques with simple liquid-liquid extraction. This means simpler systems and less waste than from previous methods. This thesis also discusses an opportunity for more efficient separation and recycle of a pharmaceutical catalyst, Mn-Salen. Using carbon dioxide with the organic aqueous tunable solvent system, the reaction can be run homogeneously and the product and catalyst separated heterogeneously, thus creating an extremely efficient process. Lastly, near critical water is used as an extraction and reaction medium by extracting ferulic acid from Brewers Spent Grain and then catalyzing its transformation to 4-vinylguaiacol. In this manner a simple, benign process is used to turn waste into valuable chemicals. Although somewhat different, each of the studied processes strives to eliminate waste and toxicity of many commonly used reaction and separation techniques, thus creating safe and sustainable processes.Georgia Institute of Technology2006-01-18T22:12:54Z2006-01-18T22:12:54Z2005-08-17Thesis1618718 bytesapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/7463en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Tetrabutylammonium tetrafluoroborate
Tetrahexylammonium bromide
Lysozyme
Bovine serum albumin
Indene
BSG
Ferulic acid
4-VG
Indinavir
Chemical processes
Separation (Technology)
Mixtures
Liquids
Chemical engineering
spellingShingle Tetrabutylammonium tetrafluoroborate
Tetrahexylammonium bromide
Lysozyme
Bovine serum albumin
Indene
BSG
Ferulic acid
4-VG
Indinavir
Chemical processes
Separation (Technology)
Mixtures
Liquids
Chemical engineering
Newton, Elizabeth Lynn
Sustainable Reaction and Separation Systems
description With increasing environmental awareness and natural resource limitations, researchers must begin to incorporate sustainability into their process and product designs. One target for green engineering is in reaction and separation design. This is typically done in a wasteful and often toxic manner with organic solvents and lack of recycle. The following thesis discusses alternatives to these costly separations by means of ionic liquids, benign extraction, separation with carbon dioxide, and near critical water. Ionic liquids are combined with carbon dioxide to induce melting point depressions of up to 124 degrees Celsius. Using this system as a reaction medium will offer control over the reaction phases while utilizing green solvents. Benign extractions are performed on both ferulic acid and on proteins from biomass by replacing alkaline solvents and costly protein separation techniques with simple liquid-liquid extraction. This means simpler systems and less waste than from previous methods. This thesis also discusses an opportunity for more efficient separation and recycle of a pharmaceutical catalyst, Mn-Salen. Using carbon dioxide with the organic aqueous tunable solvent system, the reaction can be run homogeneously and the product and catalyst separated heterogeneously, thus creating an extremely efficient process. Lastly, near critical water is used as an extraction and reaction medium by extracting ferulic acid from Brewers Spent Grain and then catalyzing its transformation to 4-vinylguaiacol. In this manner a simple, benign process is used to turn waste into valuable chemicals. Although somewhat different, each of the studied processes strives to eliminate waste and toxicity of many commonly used reaction and separation techniques, thus creating safe and sustainable processes.
author Newton, Elizabeth Lynn
author_facet Newton, Elizabeth Lynn
author_sort Newton, Elizabeth Lynn
title Sustainable Reaction and Separation Systems
title_short Sustainable Reaction and Separation Systems
title_full Sustainable Reaction and Separation Systems
title_fullStr Sustainable Reaction and Separation Systems
title_full_unstemmed Sustainable Reaction and Separation Systems
title_sort sustainable reaction and separation systems
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/7463
work_keys_str_mv AT newtonelizabethlynn sustainablereactionandseparationsystems
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